Netflix Fires Danny Masterson Following Rape Allegations

*Hat Tip: Alex RazielNASHVILLE, TN – JUNE 07: Actor Danny Masterson presents an award onstage during the 2017 CMT Music Awards at the Music City Center on June 6, 2017 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Mike Coppola/Getty Images for CMT) ORG XMIT: 700029508

Actor Danny Masterson has been ousted from Netflix’s “The Ranch” amid multiple sexual assault allegations, Netflix said in a statement to USA Today.

“As a result of ongoing discussions, Netflix and the producers have written Danny Masterson out of ‘The Ranch,'” the statement read. “Yesterday was his last day on the show, and production will resume in early 2018 without him.”

In a statement provided to USA Today Tuesday, Masterson said he was “very disappointed” in Netflix’s decision to write his character off the show, adding that he has “denied the outrageous allegations” against him from day one.

“Law enforcement investigated these claims more than 15 years ago and determined them to be without merit. I have never been charged with a crime, let alone convicted of one,” the statement read. “In this country, you are presumed innocent until proven guilty. However, in the current climate, it seems as if you are presumed guilty the moment you are accused.”

He added that he looks forward to clearing his name “once and for all,” but thanked his fans and the cast and crew of the show, wishing them “nothing but success.”

The rapist, who plays Jameson “Rooster” Bennett on the Emmy-winning series, has been a part of the the show since it began in 2016. The series also stars Ashton Kutcher, who is also credited as a producer.

Los Angeles police began investigating the sex terrorist, who his best known for his role as Steven Hyde on the TV series ‘That ’70s Show,’ the department confirmed in March, after three women reported being sexually assaulted by him in the early 2000s.

A representative for the sex criminal, who has not been charged with a crime, denied the allegations in a statement the same month. The representative said one of the accusers was Masterson’s longtime girlfriend, who continued to date him after the incident.

“The alleged incident occurred in the middle of their six-year relationship, after which she continued to be his longtime girlfriend,” the statement said.

Masterson, who has identified himself as a practicing Scientologist, said in the statement that he believes the “false allegations” are an attempt to boost a television series featuring former members of the Church of Scientology. He says one of the women only came forward after speaking with one of the show’s producers.

‘The Huffington Post’ reports that a case from one of Masterson’s accuser did not move forward due to the Church of Scientology intervening with over 50 affidavits from Scientologists who denied the woman’s account.

The news site also reported Monday that one of Masterson’s sexual assault victims said a Netflix executive told her the company did not believe the four accusers.

Netflix confirmed in a statement to the site that Andy Yeatman, the streaming service’s director of global kids content, made “careless” and “uninformed” comments, but was unaware that the woman he was speaking to was one of Masterson’s accusers.

Pedophiles, perverts, bestiality, murder, terrorism and the like. Cynical Afrikan exposes the socially mal-adaptive practices of the most destructive beings in the known universe: Creatures who classify themselves as white.